Appellee sued appellant in replevin for a •carload of stoves, sold by him to one E. B. Outlaw, then a merchant at Rector, Arkansas, who it was claimed procured the sale of said stoves by fraudulent representations as to his solvency, and with the intent not to pay for the same. Appellant claimed to hold said stoves as agent of George Taylor Commission Company and Adler-Goldman Commission Company, who it was said bought the same, together with other goods worth in all $4900, from said Outlaw, without notice of any fraud, in settlement of his debt to them, aggregating $4100, the excess of $800 being paid by them in cash.
The court gave the following instruction to the jury, to-wit: “Even if it be shown that Outlaw procured the stoves through fraud, if he has sold them to an innocent purchaser, plaintiff cannot recover. But if the parties who now hold the stoves took them with other goods amounting to about the value of forty-nine hundred dollars, in satisfaction of past-due debts from Outlaw to them, and only paid the excess of goods ■over the debts, amounting to about eight hundred dollars, in money, this alone would not be sufficient to constitute them innocent purchasers, if the other goods received by them were more than sufficient to cover all the money expended by them, and there be nothing going to show that said parties are not in as good a position now as they were before the trade with Outlaw.” The appellant excepted, moved for a new trial, which was denied, to which he excepted and appealed.
We think the proof in the case supports the theory that the sale of the stoves by appellee to E. B. Outlaw was induced by the fraudulent representations of the latter, and that Outlaw sold the stoves with his entire stock of goods to the George Taylor Commission Company and the Adler-Goldman Commission Company, for whom the appellant held them at the time of the institution of this suit as their agent; that the consideration for the sale by Outlaw was the satisfaction, at the time of the sale, of a previous indebtedness of his to the purchasers—for whom the appellant held the goods as agent—of $4100, and $800 additional paid by them for Outlaw to a bank at Cairo, 111. There is no proof that, at the time of this purchase and payment of the consideration, the purchasers had notice of the fraud of Outlaw in inducing the sale to him by the appellee.
Bona, fide purWere the purchasers bona fide purchasers, within the rule in equity, and entitled to have their purchase protected against the equity of the appellee, the original vendor. “A bona fide purchaser has been decided to be one who at the time of his purchase advances a new consideration, surrenders some security, or does some other act which leaves him in a worse position if his purchase should be set aside, and purchases in the honest belief that his vendor had a right to sell, without notice, actual or constructive, of any adverse rights, claims, interests, or equities of others in and to the property sold.” Fargason v. Edrington, 49 Ark., 207, 214; 1 Perry on Trusts, sec. 239.
It has been decided in this State that, upon a sale and delivery of goods induced by fraud, the title to the goods passes to the fraudulent vendee, subject of course to the right of the vendor to rescind and retake the goods from the fraudulent vendee or any purchaser from him with notice of his fraud. This seems to be according to the weight of authority in other States. Hamilton v. Ford, 46 Ark., 245; Henderson v. Gibbs, 18 Pacific Rep., 926; Paddon v. Taylor, 44 N. Y., 371; Kingsbury v. Smith, 13 N. H., 109; Robinson v. Fairbanks, 81 Ala., 132-134.
There is a decided conflict in the decisions of the courts, and in the reasons by which they are supported, upon the question, whether a pre-existing indebtedness is alone' sufficient to constitute a purchaser of personal property, to whom, the same has been delivered without notice of an adverse equity, a bona fide purchaser for value, within the rule in, equity that would protect him against the equities of another against the same property existing at the time of the purchase. See Basset v. Nosworthy, 2 White & Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity, part 1, p. 85, seq.; 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur.,. sec. 748. But we are relieved in this case from the necessity of deciding that vexed question.
In the case at bar there was a valuable and substantial consideration of $800 paid, in addition to the satisfaction of the debts of the purchasers against the fraudulent vendee of the appellee; and this is sufficient to support the purchase and protect the purchasers against the recovery of the property from them by appellee, on account of the fraud 'of hisvendee. They, having acquired the legal title by purchase from Outlaw for a valuable consideration paid without notice of appellee’s equity, are equally innocent with him, and their title will be protected. Where equities are equal, the law will prevail. Baggarly v. Gaither, 2. Jones, Equity (N. C.), 80; 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., sec. 747; Glidden v. Hunt, 24. Pick., 221; Kingsbury v. Smith, 13 N. H., 109.
In the case of Kingsbury v. Smith, it is held that “ a fraudulent purchase of personal chattels, accompanied with delivery, is not void, but voidable only at the election of the vendee; and, until the sale is avoided, the vendee has full power to make a valid sale of the chattels to a bona fide purchaser, having no notice of the fraud.” And that “ it is sufficient, to enable such subsequent purchaser, without notice of the fraud, to maintain the title to the chattels conveyed to him, as against the party defrauded by his vendor,, that some portion of the consideration was paid at the time of the purchase.”
The sale in that case of a colt was a consideration of the cancellation of a previous indebtedness of the fraudulent vendee to the purchaser, and the delivery to the fraudulent vendee, as a further consideration, of an overcoat, without notice to the purchaser of any equity in favor of the original vendor; and this was held sufficient to constitute the pur chaser of the fraudulent vendee a bona fide purchaser, and sufficient to maintain his title to the colt. The court said, in reasoning, that, if either party was in fault, it was the original vendor, who put his vendee in a position to deceive the sub-purchaser ; and applied the rule, “ applicable in a large class of cases, that in case of two innocent persons, if loss comes,, it must fall on him who, through negligence, or carelessness, or inadvertence, is the occasion of the loss sustained.”
It follows that the third instruction given by the circuit court to the jury was erroneous.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.